Gilgeous-Alexander drops game-high 34 points as Thunder rout Pacers to even NBA Finals

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This has been Oklahoma City's formula all season: Lose one game, respond in the next. Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 34 points, Alex Caruso added 20 off the bench and the Thunder beat the Indiana Pacers 123-107 on Sunday night to tie these finals at one game apiece.

Oklahoma City responds with comfortable 123-107 win to level series at 1-1

Tim Reynolds · The Associated Press

· Posted: Jun 08, 2025 11:13 PM EDT | Last Updated: 36 minutes ago

A men's basketball player shoots the ball.

Oklahoma City Thunder guard Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored a game-high 34 points in his team's 123-107 victory against the Indiana Pacers in Game 2 of the NBA Finals on Sunday. (Kyle Phillips/The Associated Press)

This has been Oklahoma City's formula all season: Lose one game, respond in the next.

That's exactly what the Thunder did in Game 2 of the NBA Finals.

Hamilton, Ont., native Shai Gilgeous-Alexander scored 34 points, Alex Caruso added 20 off the bench and the Thunder beat the Indiana Pacers 123-107 on Sunday night to tie these finals at one game apiece.

"We did some things good tonight. We did some things bad," Gilgeous-Alexander said. "We've got to be able to get better and be ready for Game 3."

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Tyrese Haliburton scored 17 for Indiana, which erased a 15-point, fourth-quarter deficit in Game 1 but never made a push on Sunday. Myles Turner scored 16 and Pascal Siakam added 15 for the Pacers, the first team since Miami in 2013 to not have a 20-point scorer in the first two games of the finals.

Game 3 is Wednesday at Indianapolis, in what will be the first finals game in that city in 25 years.

But the real milestone for the MVP came a couple hours later, when he and most everybody else on the Thunder got a finals win for the first time.

A 19-2 run in the second quarter turned what was a six-point game into a 23-point Thunder lead. It might have seemed wobbly a couple of times — an immediate 10-0 rebuttal by the Pacers made it 52-39, and Indiana was within 13 again after Andrew Nembhard's layup with 7:09 left in the third — but the Thunder lead was never in serious doubt.

With the noise level in the building often topping 100 decibels — a chainsaw is 110 dB, for comparison purposes — the Thunder did what they've done pretty much all season. They came off a loss, this time a 111-110 defeat in Game 1, and blew somebody out as their response.

Including the NBA Cup title game, which doesn't count in any standings, the Thunder are now 18-2 this season when coming off a loss. Of those 18 wins, 12 have been by double digits.

With files from CBC Sports

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